Identification of feline Kiss1 and distribution of immunoreactive kisspeptin in the hypothalamus of the domestic cat.
Amelkina. Olga O; Tanyapanyachon. Prattana P; Thongphakdee. Ampika A; Chatdarong. Kaywalee K
Key Findings
- The full-length Kiss1 gene was cloned from cat hypothalamus and caracal testis, revealing a 149‑amino‑acid precursor.
- The core kisspeptin‑10 (Kp10) sequence is identical in domestic cats, clouded leopards, Siberian tigers, and highly conserved across vertebrates.
- Immunoreactive kisspeptin is found in the periventricular and infundibular nuclei of the cat hypothalamus.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, this study mainly confirms that kisspeptin’s structure is highly conserved in mammals, but it offers no direct guidance on dosing, protocols, or health benefits for humans. It suggests that any effects seen in cats are unlikely to translate into actionable longevity or performance strategies without further human research.
Summary
Scientists mapped the kisspeptin gene (Kiss1) in domestic cats and related wild cats, showing the peptide's structure is almost identical across these species and locating it in specific brain regions that control reproduction.
Abstract
In recent years, the Kiss1 gene has been reported in a number of vertebrate species, and a substantial dataset has been acquired to demonstrate the critical role of kisspeptins in the reproductive system; yet limited information is available for carnivores. In the present study, we identified and characterized feline Kiss1 by isolating and cloning its full-length cDNA in the domestic cat hypothalamus and caracal testis, using the method of rapid amplification of cDNA ends. Additionally, we isolated and cloned the 3' end of Kiss1 cDNA, containing kisspeptin-10 (Kp10), from the ovaries of a clouded leopard and Siberian tiger. Nucleotide sequencing revealed that domestic cat Kiss1 cDNA is of 711 base pairs and caracal Kiss1 cDNA is of 792 base pairs, both having an open reading frame of 450 base pairs, encoding a precursor protein Kiss1 of 149 amino acids. The core sequence of the feline kisspeptin Kp10 was found to be identical in all species analyzed here and is highly conserved in other vertebrate species. Using an anti-Kp10 antibody, we found the immunoreactive kisspeptin to be localized in the periventricular and infundibular nuclei of the cat hypothalamus. The results show that kisspeptin is highly conserved among different feline families, and its immunoreactive distribution in the hypothalamus may indicate its physiological function in the domestic cat.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-05-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.1262/jrd.2018-101